Siege of Rhegium explained

Conflict:Siege of Rhegium
Date:387 BC
Place:Rhegium, Calabria
Result:Syracusan victory
Combatant1:Syracuse
Combatant2:Rhegium
Commander1:Dionysius I of Syracuse

The siege of Rhegium was undertaken in 387 BC by a Syracusan force against the city of Rhegium. The Syracusans were led by the tyrant Dionysius I.[1] Dionysius took the city, and sold its inhabitants into slavery.

Rhegium had allied with Carthage against Syracuse during the Third Sicilian War because Syracuse was a rival in Magna Graecia and both wanted to control the Strait of Messina. Now that Syracuse and Carthage had secured peace, Dionysius wanted revenge on Rhegium. Dionysius invaded the mainland crushing Rhegium’s ally, the Italiote League of Taurentum, at the Battle of the Elleporus. He then besieged, captured and sacked Rhegium, selling its inhabitants into slavery. Rhegium would eventually be re-founded by Dionysius II.

Notes and References

  1. The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World. Italy, Oxford University Press, 2001. 419.